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Richmond History Group

The Richmond History Group is based at Avebury House. The group maintains a collection of books, photographs and other memorabilia illustrating and recording the history of Avebury House and the development of the surrounding suburb of Richmond. We seek to expand the collection and have begun a project to digitise items from the collection and make them available online. This is a work-in-progress and we will be adding items to this site from now on.

If you have photographs or other material concerning Richmond’s past, we would love to hear from you. Perhaps you would like to donate items to the collection, or allow us to view the material and if suitable, borrow items for recording and adding to our digital archive. We would of course return the items to you in the same condition as we received them.

If you would like to learn more about the group, or become involved, please contact Andrea at 381-6615.

Stanmore Road, Richmond — 1940

16/7/2018

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This great piece of work, labelled “Richmond Village”, shows the layout of sections along the north end of Stanmore Road c.1940. North is at the right. The stretch of Stanmore Road runs from the corner of Draper St and Swanns Rd to its northern end at the intersection with North Avon Rd. The data was researched by Noeline Hansen and Shona Ward who were very active in the Richmond History Group based at Avebury House in the years before the earthquakes. The map was drawn by Ken Washington. The original document is large: 2500 x 460 mm and is on display in the Richmond Room, upstairs at Avebury House, 9 Eveleyn Couzins Ave.

On the map, residences are coloured pink and commercial properties are blue. Utilities are indicated in yellow. Where the residential occupiers (not necessarily the owners) of the properties have been identified, their names and occupation, if known, have been shown. Businesses show the name of the owner and the type of enterprise. The map makes for fascinating reading. As late as 1940 there are two blacksmiths in this one stretch of Stanmore Rd.

There is a post office marked at 323 Stanmore Rd. This building had previously been occupied by a fruiterer business — there are two photos of this shop dated 1927 in the history group collection at Avebury House. A section is shown as having been set aside for the construction of a post office on the eastern corner of Stanmore and North Avon Rds, but this was never built.

Bruce St used to connect Stanmore Rd and Pavitt St. The roadway still exists as a driveway immediately south of the St. Vincent de Paul building on Stanmore Rd, but sometime after 1954 (Bruce St appears in a Christchurch map of that date), the name was dropped and the road is not marked on modern maps. In 1940, the site of the St. Vincent de Paul shop was occupied by Morgan Davies, a cobbler, with Aldersley’s bakery immediately behind that to the west.

The butcher, Eric McPherson, moved from 321 Stanmore Rd, as shown on the map, to the shop at 75 North Avon Rd (at the north end of Stanmore Rd) in 1940.1

For many years there was a suburban police station at 245 Stanmore, known as Bingsland police station; the name was a carry-over from the earliest days of settlement in the area. The station, which was opened in 1879, retained that name until 1957, when it was changed to ‘North Avon’. The station moved to new premises at 45 North Parade in 1963, but the North Avon station closed altogether in 1968.2


Click on the picture above to see the map in detail.


Notes:
1  Interview with Noeline Hansen (née McPherson), Eric’s daughter.
2  Thomson, Barry, 1989. “Sharing the Challenge — A Social and Pictorial History of the
Christchurch Police District”, pp146–7.
2 Comments

Launching the Rondino

12/4/2018

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The handwritten caption for this photo simply states “Launching the Rondino”. A little more information might be useful!? It turns out that the Rondino was a boat built by Huia Beaumont, a well-known Richmond resident, in the late 1930s. In his autobiography, “Long Time Passing”,* Huia writes at some length about the Rondino, how he built it and the adventures he and his family enjoyed in the boat on the Avon River.

Huia started building the Rondino in 1939, from plans published in “Popular Mechanic” magazine. The boat was 17 feet long with a 6-foot beam and drew only 4 inches unloaded. Even with 16 adults and children on board, Huia says the boat drew only 8 inches and was very stable.

If the photo was taken at the launching, as the caption suggests, the date was 1 February 1940 and the location was just downstream of the Medway St weir. The photo was taken from the north bank looking upstream. The picture reveals more than its nominal subject matter. The old wooden Medway St bridge, built in 1938 and replaced in 1980, is visible, as is the weir, which was removed in the 1950s. The river banks appear to be sparsely planted and the willow trees on the south bank are a lot smaller than today.

The photo is a poor modern copy of an old colour print. Colour film was still unusual in New Zealand in 1940; most photos at this time were taken on B&W film. Large scale colour photography didn’t become commonplace in New Zealand for non-enthusiasts until the 1960’s.

* Beaumont, H.W., “Long Time Passing, the Life Story of ‘Down to Earth Beauie”
Richmond Village Bookshop, 1992.
pp163–173.

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Wedding Group, 79 North Avon Road, 1922

26/2/2018

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This photograph is a modern copy print of an original photograph, showing a group attending the wedding of Hilda Marjory Cusack and Gordon Robert Wilson in 1922. The photo was taken at 79 North Avon Road. There is some information recorded on the reverse of the print, which is summarized below:
79 North Avon Road. Richmond. Christchurch. 1922.
The wedding photo of Hilda Marjory Cusack and Gordon Robert Wilson.

The baby to the left of the group is Jeffrey Raymond Pentecost, held by his father, Samuel Pentecost J.P. and secretary to Dan Sullivan, Labour M.P. for Avon, 1919–47. The Pentecost family lived at 85 North Avon Road, and the photograph and information were donated by Mrs. Joan Pentecost, wife of Jeffrey.

Families occupying the four houses on the block between Stapletons Road & Petrie Street:
75 North Avon Road — Straws: two daughters.
79 North Avon Road — Cusack: four daughters.
85 North Avon Road — Pentecost: four daughters & one son.
89 North Avon Road — Ramsay: three daughters.


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James Arthur Flesher, 1865–1930

26/2/2018

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The photograph shows James Flesher in mayoral regalia, although it is not clear whether the photo was taken when he was mayor of New Brighton (1915–17) or Christchurch (1923–25). James Flesher lived in Richmond; the Flesher family owned Avebury House and land between the house and the river.

Biographical data based on information on the Christchurch City Libraries website:
James Arthur Flesher was born in Christchurch on 13 August, 1865, the son of William and Dorothy Flesher, who owned Avebury House. James was educated at Christ’s College and became a lawyer; he was admitted as a solicitor in 1898, and when he started his own legal firm the following year, he was admitted as a barrister.

In 1893 he was elected to the Christchurch City Council, representing the Richmond Ward. In 1900 he married Margaret Lucy England. They had two children. From 1915 to 1917 he was Mayor of New Brighton Borough. He was appointed borough solicitor in 1918, a position he held until his death.
In 1918 he was again elected to the Christchurch City Council and he became Chairman of the By-laws & Finance Committee. He remained a councillor till 1920, and in 1923 he was elected Mayor of Christchurch, a position he held for two years. In 1928 he was again elected to council and remained a councillor until his death in 1930. He was also elected to the Christchurch Tramway Board in 1906, was Chairman from 1913–1916, and was still a member of the board at the time of his death.

James was also a member of many other local boards and organisations. His obituary stated: “It was not the length of his public service, long as that was, or the number of positions he occupied, many as they were, that gave him his conspicuous place among the public men of the city, but the force and capacity that he constantly exhibited. He had the command of fact and the clear view of his object which keeps discussion to the direct and useful line.”
James died in 1930 aged 65 years and was buried in the Avonside Anglican Cemetery. He was survived by his wife, Margaret, son, Herbert, and daughter, Mrs F. M. L. Sheppard. Flesher Avenue, which runs through the property once owned by the Flesher family, is named after him.

Here is a previous post about the Flesher family photo album covering the years 1909-11.

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Hadfield Family History

7/2/2018

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This document was prepared by Roger Hadfield for a family reunion which was held in Richmond in 2016. It traces the story of the Hadfield family, who were early residents in Richmond. Joseph Hadfield, his wife Ann and two children came to Christchurch from England in 1862. In 1865 Joseph purchased eight acres of land on Stanmore Rd when the area was outside the city and was still swamp-land; in the 1863 Black Map the area is described as ‘swamp, raupo and tussock’. Later he built a large two-storey house here with a considerable garden at 300 Stanmore Rd. The weeping elm on Stanmore Rd by the supermarket is the only surviving remnant.

Although the house is gone, the Hadfield family retain a strong connection to Richmond. Our thanks to the family who have given their permission for us to include this valuable document here.
hadfield_family_reunion-2016-_document.pdf
File Size: 5956 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

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Flesher Family Photos

12/1/2018

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In our archives is a photograph album consisting of 24 pages of B&W photos, plus front and rear covers. The photographs show the Flesher family and their home at Avebury in 1909–11, after the 1907 renovations overseen by James Glanville, the original architect. There are two good exterior views of Avebury House and an interior view of the drawing room on the ground floor. There is a photo of the tennis court to the south of the house (where the paddling pool is now) and several views of the garden. Several of the photos show social occasions at Avebury, while others show the Flesher children; Hubert and Beryl, sometimes along with other children. Apart from the valuable records of Avebury and its surroundings, the photos give an interesting insight into the lives of a wealthy family in Edwardian Christchurch.

You can download the whole album below:

flesher_family_photo_album-c1910.pdf
File Size: 11063 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

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